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Town Hall Meeting Details Upcoming Changes to TRICARE

MC2 Brian H. Abel | November 9, 2017

Commander, California Medical Detachment, U.S. Army Lt. Col. Brian Lanier provided a detailed update on TRICARE changes during a town hall meeting with NPS students, military faculty and staff, and spouses in King Auditorium, Nov. 7.

Commander, California Medical Detachment, U.S. Army Lt. Col. Brian Lanier provided a detailed update on TRICARE changes during a town hall meeting with NPS students, military faculty and staff, and spouses in King Auditorium, Nov. 7.

“The plan currently known as TRICARE Standard is going to go away, and it’s going to be replaced with something known as TRICARE Select,” said Lanier. “How beneficiaries will be able to enroll or change plans will be impacted by that change.”

Effective Nov. 22, 2017 there will be a freeze on enrollment on the TRICARE website, he explained.

“The managed care support contract for TRICARE in the West region, where we are, is going to change,” said Lanier. “HealthNet Federal Services will take over the contract from United Healthcare West for military and veterans.”

Lanier stressed that the biggest change, long-term, is how service members will go about signing up their family members. Active duty service members will still be enrolled in TRICARE Prime, he noted.

“The default pathway will depend on whether you live in an area where there’s a military treatment facility,” said Lanier. “If you don’t or you live overseas, family members, unless the service member ops otherwise, are going to be enrolled in TRICARE Select. If you live in the continental U.S. with a military treatment facility nearby, then you’re automatically going to be enrolled in TRICARE Prime, unless you declare otherwise.”

The Maj. Gen. William H. Gourley VA-DOD Outpatient Clinic in Marina was opened in August for added care for veterans and family members. The clinic is also a good source for clarification on the TRICARE changes, Lanier noted.

“The other big change is going to be that there’s going to be an open enrollment period for the first year of roll outs in order to switch from prime to select and vice versa,” Lanier stressed. “There’s going to be no predetermined open enrollment period, people will be able to move freely between one plan or the other.

“People who are already in prime are going to stay in prime and there will not be a forced end function,” Lanier continued.

In closing, Lanier encouraged service members and their families to take advantage of the information available on the TRICARE website for further details on upcoming changes, and how they may impact individual families.